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    • Ar chevron_right

      Recap: Here’s what happened in Google’s search antitrust trial

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 9 May 2025

    Last year, United States District Court Judge Amit Mehta ruled that Google violated antitrust law by illegally maintaining a monopoly in search. Now, Google and the Department of Justice (DOJ) have had their say in the remedy phase of the trial, which wraps up today. It will determine the consequences for Google's actions, potentially changing the landscape for search as we rocket into the AI era, whether we like it or not.

    The remedy trial featured over 20 witnesses, including representatives from some of the most important technology firms in the world. Their statements about the past, present, and future of search moved markets, but what does the testimony mean for Google?

    Everybody wants Chrome

    One of the DOJ's proposed remedies is to force Google to divest Chrome and the open source Chromium project. Google has been adamant both in and out of the courtroom that it is the only company that can properly run Chrome. It says selling Chrome would negatively impact privacy and security because Google's technology is deeply embedded in the browser. And regardless, Google Chrome would be too expensive for anyone to buy.

    Read full article

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    • tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagantitrust tagantitrust tagantitrust tagdoj tagdoj tagdoj tagsearch tagsearch tagsearch tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagantitrust tagantitrust tagantitrust tagdoj tagdoj tagdoj tagsearch tagsearch tagsearch tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagantitrust tagantitrust tagantitrust tagdoj tagdoj tagdoj tagsearch tagsearch tagsearch

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Recap: Here’s what happened in Google’s search antitrust trial

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 9 May 2025

    Last year, United States District Court Judge Amit Mehta ruled that Google violated antitrust law by illegally maintaining a monopoly in search. Now, Google and the Department of Justice (DOJ) have had their say in the remedy phase of the trial, which wraps up today. It will determine the consequences for Google's actions, potentially changing the landscape for search as we rocket into the AI era, whether we like it or not.

    The remedy trial featured over 20 witnesses, including representatives from some of the most important technology firms in the world. Their statements about the past, present, and future of search moved markets, but what does the testimony mean for Google?

    Everybody wants Chrome

    One of the DOJ's proposed remedies is to force Google to divest Chrome and the open source Chromium project. Google has been adamant both in and out of the courtroom that it is the only company that can properly run Chrome. It says selling Chrome would negatively impact privacy and security because Google's technology is deeply embedded in the browser. And regardless, Google Chrome would be too expensive for anyone to buy.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagantitrust tagantitrust tagantitrust tagdoj tagdoj tagdoj tagsearch tagsearch tagsearch tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagantitrust tagantitrust tagantitrust tagdoj tagdoj tagdoj tagsearch tagsearch tagsearch tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagantitrust tagantitrust tagantitrust tagdoj tagdoj tagdoj tagsearch tagsearch tagsearch

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Recap: Here’s what happened in Google’s search antitrust trial

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 9 May 2025

    Last year, United States District Court Judge Amit Mehta ruled that Google violated antitrust law by illegally maintaining a monopoly in search. Now, Google and the Department of Justice (DOJ) have had their say in the remedy phase of the trial, which wraps up today. It will determine the consequences for Google's actions, potentially changing the landscape for search as we rocket into the AI era, whether we like it or not.

    The remedy trial featured over 20 witnesses, including representatives from some of the most important technology firms in the world. Their statements about the past, present, and future of search moved markets, but what does the testimony mean for Google?

    Everybody wants Chrome

    One of the DOJ's proposed remedies is to force Google to divest Chrome and the open source Chromium project. Google has been adamant both in and out of the courtroom that it is the only company that can properly run Chrome. It says selling Chrome would negatively impact privacy and security because Google's technology is deeply embedded in the browser. And regardless, Google Chrome would be too expensive for anyone to buy.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagantitrust tagantitrust tagantitrust tagdoj tagdoj tagdoj tagsearch tagsearch tagsearch tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagantitrust tagantitrust tagantitrust tagdoj tagdoj tagdoj tagsearch tagsearch tagsearch tagai tagai tagai taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle tagtech tagtech tagtech tagantitrust tagantitrust tagantitrust tagdoj tagdoj tagdoj tagsearch tagsearch tagsearch

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Linux kernel is leaving 486 CPUs behind, only 18 years after the last one made

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 9 May 2025 • 1 minute

    Intel's i486 was the first "computer number" I ever really understood. Sure, my elementary school computer lab had both the Apple IIGS and Apple IIc, and one of them was slightly more useful, for reasons unexplained to me. But soon after my father brought home his office's discarded Gateway desktop with a 486DX 33 MHz inside, I was catapulted into my first Intel sorting scheme. I learned there was an x86 before this one (i386), and there were models with different trailing numbers (16–100 MHz) and "DX" levels. This was my first grasp of what hardware I was actually using and what could improve inside it.

    More than 36 years after the release of the 486 and 18 years after Intel stopped making them , leaders of the Linux kernel believe the project can improve itself by leaving i486 support behind. Ingo Molnar, quoting Linus Torvalds regarding "zero real reason for anybody to waste one second" on 486 support, submitted a patch series to the 6.15 kernel that updates its minimum support features. Those requirements now include TSC ( Time Stamp Counter ) and CX8 (i.e., "fixed" CMPXCH8B , its own whole thing ), features that the 486 lacks (as do some early non-Pentium 586 processors).

    It's not the first time Torvalds has suggested dropping support for 32-bit processors and relieving kernel developers from implementing archaic emulation and work-around solutions. "We got rid of i386 support back in 2012. Maybe it's time to get rid of i486 support in 2022," Torvalds wrote in October 2022 . Failing major changes to the 6.15 kernel, which will likely arrive late this month , i486 support will be dropped.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagtech tagtech tagtech tag486 tag486 tag486 tagcmpxchg8b tagcmpxchg8b tagcmpxchg8b tagi486 tagi486 tagi486 tagintel tagintel tagintel tagpentium tagpentium tagpentium tagtime stamp counter tagtime stamp counter tagtime stamp counter tagtech tagtech tagtech tag486 tag486 tag486 tagcmpxchg8b tagcmpxchg8b tagcmpxchg8b tagi486 tagi486 tagi486 tagintel tagintel tagintel tagpentium tagpentium tagpentium tagtime stamp counter tagtime stamp counter tagtime stamp counter tagtech tagtech tagtech tag486 tag486 tag486 tagcmpxchg8b tagcmpxchg8b tagcmpxchg8b tagi486 tagi486 tagi486 tagintel tagintel tagintel tagpentium tagpentium tagpentium tagtime stamp counter tagtime stamp counter tagtime stamp counter

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Linux kernel is leaving 486 CPUs behind, only 18 years after the last one made

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 9 May 2025 • 1 minute

    Intel's i486 was the first "computer number" I ever really understood. Sure, my elementary school computer lab had both the Apple IIGS and Apple IIc, and one of them was slightly more useful, for reasons unexplained to me. But soon after my father brought home his office's discarded Gateway desktop with a 486DX 33 MHz inside, I was catapulted into my first Intel sorting scheme. I learned there was an x86 before this one (i386), and there were models with different trailing numbers (16–100 MHz) and "DX" levels. This was my first grasp of what hardware I was actually using and what could improve inside it.

    More than 36 years after the release of the 486 and 18 years after Intel stopped making them , leaders of the Linux kernel believe the project can improve itself by leaving i486 support behind. Ingo Molnar, quoting Linus Torvalds regarding "zero real reason for anybody to waste one second" on 486 support, submitted a patch series to the 6.15 kernel that updates its minimum support features. Those requirements now include TSC ( Time Stamp Counter ) and CX8 (i.e., "fixed" CMPXCH8B , its own whole thing ), features that the 486 lacks (as do some early non-Pentium 586 processors).

    It's not the first time Torvalds has suggested dropping support for 32-bit processors and relieving kernel developers from implementing archaic emulation and work-around solutions. "We got rid of i386 support back in 2012. Maybe it's time to get rid of i486 support in 2022," Torvalds wrote in October 2022 . Failing major changes to the 6.15 kernel, which will likely arrive late this month , i486 support will be dropped.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagtech tagtech tagtech tag486 tag486 tag486 tagcmpxchg8b tagcmpxchg8b tagcmpxchg8b tagi486 tagi486 tagi486 tagintel tagintel tagintel tagpentium tagpentium tagpentium tagtime stamp counter tagtime stamp counter tagtime stamp counter tagtech tagtech tagtech tag486 tag486 tag486 tagcmpxchg8b tagcmpxchg8b tagcmpxchg8b tagi486 tagi486 tagi486 tagintel tagintel tagintel tagpentium tagpentium tagpentium tagtime stamp counter tagtime stamp counter tagtime stamp counter tagtech tagtech tagtech tag486 tag486 tag486 tagcmpxchg8b tagcmpxchg8b tagcmpxchg8b tagi486 tagi486 tagi486 tagintel tagintel tagintel tagpentium tagpentium tagpentium tagtime stamp counter tagtime stamp counter tagtime stamp counter

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Linux kernel is leaving 486 CPUs behind, only 18 years after the last one made

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 9 May 2025 • 1 minute

    Intel's i486 was the first "computer number" I ever really understood. Sure, my elementary school computer lab had both the Apple IIGS and Apple IIc, and one of them was slightly more useful, for reasons unexplained to me. But soon after my father brought home his office's discarded Gateway desktop with a 486DX 33 MHz inside, I was catapulted into my first Intel sorting scheme. I learned there was an x86 before this one (i386), and there were models with different trailing numbers (16–100 MHz) and "DX" levels. This was my first grasp of what hardware I was actually using and what could improve inside it.

    More than 36 years after the release of the 486 and 18 years after Intel stopped making them , leaders of the Linux kernel believe the project can improve itself by leaving i486 support behind. Ingo Molnar, quoting Linus Torvalds regarding "zero real reason for anybody to waste one second" on 486 support, submitted a patch series to the 6.15 kernel that updates its minimum support features. Those requirements now include TSC ( Time Stamp Counter ) and CX8 (i.e., "fixed" CMPXCH8B , its own whole thing ), features that the 486 lacks (as do some early non-Pentium 586 processors).

    It's not the first time Torvalds has suggested dropping support for 32-bit processors and relieving kernel developers from implementing archaic emulation and work-around solutions. "We got rid of i386 support back in 2012. Maybe it's time to get rid of i486 support in 2022," Torvalds wrote in October 2022 . Failing major changes to the 6.15 kernel, which will likely arrive late this month , i486 support will be dropped.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagtech tagtech tagtech tag486 tag486 tag486 tagcmpxchg8b tagcmpxchg8b tagcmpxchg8b tagi486 tagi486 tagi486 tagintel tagintel tagintel tagpentium tagpentium tagpentium tagtime stamp counter tagtime stamp counter tagtime stamp counter tagtech tagtech tagtech tag486 tag486 tag486 tagcmpxchg8b tagcmpxchg8b tagcmpxchg8b tagi486 tagi486 tagi486 tagintel tagintel tagintel tagpentium tagpentium tagpentium tagtime stamp counter tagtime stamp counter tagtime stamp counter tagtech tagtech tagtech tag486 tag486 tag486 tagcmpxchg8b tagcmpxchg8b tagcmpxchg8b tagi486 tagi486 tagi486 tagintel tagintel tagintel tagpentium tagpentium tagpentium tagtime stamp counter tagtime stamp counter tagtime stamp counter

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Trump kills broadband grants, calls digital equity program “racist and illegal”

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 9 May 2025

    President Donald Trump said he is killing a broadband grant program that was authorized by Congress, claiming that the Digital Equity Act of 2021 is racist and unconstitutional.

    "I have spoken with my wonderful Secretary of Commerce, Howard Lutnick, and we agree that the Biden/Harris so-called 'Digital Equity Act' is totally UNCONSTITUTIONAL. No more woke handouts based on race! The Digital Equity Program is a RACIST and ILLEGAL $2.5 BILLION DOLLAR giveaway. I am ending this IMMEDIATELY, and saving Taxpayers BILLIONS OF DOLLARS!" Trump wrote in a Truth Social post yesterday.

    The Digital Equity Act provided $2.75 billion for three grant programs. As a National Telecommunications and Information Administration webpage says, the grants "aim to ensure that all people and communities have the skills, technology, and capacity needed to reap the full benefits of our digital economy."

    Read full article

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    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagdigital equity act tagdigital equity act tagdigital equity act tagtrump tagtrump tagtrump tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagdigital equity act tagdigital equity act tagdigital equity act tagtrump tagtrump tagtrump tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagdigital equity act tagdigital equity act tagdigital equity act tagtrump tagtrump tagtrump

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Trump kills broadband grants, calls digital equity program “racist and illegal”

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 9 May 2025

    President Donald Trump said he is killing a broadband grant program that was authorized by Congress, claiming that the Digital Equity Act of 2021 is racist and unconstitutional.

    "I have spoken with my wonderful Secretary of Commerce, Howard Lutnick, and we agree that the Biden/Harris so-called 'Digital Equity Act' is totally UNCONSTITUTIONAL. No more woke handouts based on race! The Digital Equity Program is a RACIST and ILLEGAL $2.5 BILLION DOLLAR giveaway. I am ending this IMMEDIATELY, and saving Taxpayers BILLIONS OF DOLLARS!" Trump wrote in a Truth Social post yesterday.

    The Digital Equity Act provided $2.75 billion for three grant programs. As a National Telecommunications and Information Administration webpage says, the grants "aim to ensure that all people and communities have the skills, technology, and capacity needed to reap the full benefits of our digital economy."

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagdigital equity act tagdigital equity act tagdigital equity act tagtrump tagtrump tagtrump tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagdigital equity act tagdigital equity act tagdigital equity act tagtrump tagtrump tagtrump tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagdigital equity act tagdigital equity act tagdigital equity act tagtrump tagtrump tagtrump

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Trump kills broadband grants, calls digital equity program “racist and illegal”

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 9 May 2025

    President Donald Trump said he is killing a broadband grant program that was authorized by Congress, claiming that the Digital Equity Act of 2021 is racist and unconstitutional.

    "I have spoken with my wonderful Secretary of Commerce, Howard Lutnick, and we agree that the Biden/Harris so-called 'Digital Equity Act' is totally UNCONSTITUTIONAL. No more woke handouts based on race! The Digital Equity Program is a RACIST and ILLEGAL $2.5 BILLION DOLLAR giveaway. I am ending this IMMEDIATELY, and saving Taxpayers BILLIONS OF DOLLARS!" Trump wrote in a Truth Social post yesterday.

    The Digital Equity Act provided $2.75 billion for three grant programs. As a National Telecommunications and Information Administration webpage says, the grants "aim to ensure that all people and communities have the skills, technology, and capacity needed to reap the full benefits of our digital economy."

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagdigital equity act tagdigital equity act tagdigital equity act tagtrump tagtrump tagtrump tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagdigital equity act tagdigital equity act tagdigital equity act tagtrump tagtrump tagtrump tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagdigital equity act tagdigital equity act tagdigital equity act tagtrump tagtrump tagtrump

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